When grown in the ideal conditions, lavender is a pretty and fragrant addition to any garden. Learn the best ways to grow it and its many uses around the home.
June 30, 2015
When grown in the ideal conditions, lavender is a pretty and fragrant addition to any garden. Learn the best ways to grow it and its many uses around the home.
A Mediterranean herb that's usually winter hardy sports thin, fragrant, grey-green leaves and purple flowers in summer.
Dried lavender flowers and leaves are a delight in sachets, wreaths and potpourri.
Give lavender full sun and light, well-drained, slightly alkaline soil.
With its airy texture and upright, slightly sprawling habit, lavender is an excellent choice for softening hard structural lines in the landscape.
Lavender needs regular clipping to keep it from becoming leggy.
If a plant appears dead in spring, wait a while in case new stems emerge from the base when the weather becomes warmer.
Your clothes will emerge perfumed with a light herbal scent.
Lavender is a prime ingredient in potpourri and is especially nice combined with rose petals. Folklore holds that a little bag of dried blooms slipped inside your pillowcase will help you sleep.
Use this "wand" to freshen closets and drawers or slip it onto a shelf in a bathroom cabinet.
For a festive occasion, sprinkle dried lavender stems into the fireplace. As they burn, they'll delicately scent the air.
Sprinkle lavender blooms into the tub or add them to a footbath to soothe, scent, and refresh your skin.
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